geometry dash auto ai v1.0 halloween special
Watch the AI Suffer: Geometry Dash Auto AI v1.0 Halloween Special
Have you ever wanted to just... watch? After all those thousands of attempts, the sweat, the rage, the 98% fails. What if you could sit back and let something else handle the pain? Well, creator @sciencedolphin9 did just that. They spent over two years and 250+ hours building an AI to play Geometry Dash for you. Welcome to Geometry Dash Auto AI v1.0 Halloween Special. It's less of a game you play, and more of a bizarre, fascinating spectator sport.
The manual reads like a developer's diary mixed with proud parent energy. They call it "AutoAI," a mix of automation, observation, and AI that claims "99.9% accurate results!". The most important instruction is right at the top: "The AI will get out the 1st time you run a level, please be patient and wait for it to be run the 2nd time." This isn't a perfect machine; it's a learning one. You select a level, hit space to skip the intro, and then... you watch. The first run is a warm-up, a scouting mission. The AI dies at specific points (5% in Level 1, 30-35% in Level 2). But the second run? That's when the magic (supposedly) happens. They even recommend running it at around 30 FPS so the AI can process data fast enough.
Think about what this represents. The creator started this project before even having a Scratch account. This was a labor of love, or maybe obsession. The detailed "Popular Log" in the manual is incredible – tracking views, loves, and favorites by the hour. "4 mins: 5 loves/faves & 8 views... 94 hours: Top remixed instead of top loved..." It's a real-time map of a project catching fire in a community. It hit "TOP LOVED," got tons of remixes, and the creator is "still trying to respond to 2 days of comments." This isn't just code; it's a community event.
So, what's the point of playing a game where you don't play? It's a experiment. It's a piece of GD fan art in the form of a machine. It asks the question: "Can a pattern-recognition AI learn the patterns of Geometry Dash?" You watch it fail, learn, and (hopefully) succeed. It turns your frustration into curiosity. For the player who is burnt out from other games, or the analyzer who loves digging into how things work, this is a unique gem. It’s a Halloween special not because of spooky ghosts, but because the spectacle of an AI struggling with spike jumps is its own kind of horror show. Crank the volume, as the manual suggests, and enjoy the show. And remember, be patient on that first run.
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